Can you forgive her?, by Anthony Trollope

Chapter 67

The Last Kiss

Alice, on her return from Westmoreland, went direct to Park Lane, whither Lady Glencora and Mr
Palliser had also returned before her. She was to remain with them in London one entire day, and on the morning after
that they were to start for Paris. She found Mr Palliser in close attendance upon his wife. Not that there was anything
in his manner which at all implied that he was keeping watch over her, or that he was more with her, or closer to her
than a loving husband might wish to be with a young wife; but the mode of life was very different from that which Alice
had seen at Matching Priory!

On her arrival Mr Palliser himself received her in the hall, and took her up to his wife before she had taken off
her travelling hat. “We are so much obliged to you, Miss Vavasor,” he said. “I feel it quite as deeply as
Glencora.”

“Oh, no,” she said; “it is I that am under obligation to you for taking me.”

He merely smiled, and shook his head, and then took her upstairs. On the stairs he said one other word to her: “You
must forgive me if I was cross to you that night she went out among the ruins.” Alice muttered something — some little
fib of courtesy as to the matter having been forgotten, or never borne in mind; and then they went on to Lady
Glencora’s room. It seemed to Alice that he was not so big or so much to be dreaded as when she had seen him at
Matching. His descent from an expectant, or more than an expectant, Chancellor of the Exchequer, down to a simple,
attentive husband, seemed to affect his gait, his voice, and all his demeanour. When he received Alice at the Priory he
certainly loomed before her as something great, whereas now his greatness seemed to have fallen from him. We must own
that this was hard upon him, seeing that the deed by which he had divested himself of his greatness had been so pure
and good!

“Dear Alice, this is so good of you! I am all in the midst of packing, and Plantagenet is helping me.” Plantagenet
winced a little under this, as the hero of old must have winced when he was found with the distaff. Mr Palliser had
relinquished his sword of state for the distaff which he had assumed, and could take no glory in the change. There was,
too, in his wife’s voice the slightest hint of mockery, which, slight as it was, he perhaps thought she might have
spared. “You have nothing left to pack,” continued Glencora, “and I don’t know what you can do to amuse yourself.”

“I will help you,” said Alice.

“But we have so very nearly done. I think we shall have to pull all the things out, and put them up again, or we
shall never get through tomorrow. We couldn’t start tomorrow — could we, Plantagenet?”

“Not very well, as your rooms are ordered in Paris for the next day.”

“As if we couldn’t find rooms at every inn on the road. Men are so particular. Now in travelling I should like never
to order rooms — never to know where I was going or when I was going, and to carry everything I wanted in a
market-basket.” Alice, who by this time had followed her friend along the passage to her bedroom, and had seen how
widely the packages were spread about, bethought herself that the market-basket should be a large one. “And I would
never travel among Christians. Christians are so slow, and they wear chimney-pot hats everywhere. The further one goes
from London among Christians, the more they wear chimney-pot hats. I want Plantagenet to take us to see the Kurds, but
he won’t.”

“I don’t think that would be fair to Miss Vavasor,” said Mr Palliser, who had followed them.

“Don’t put the blame on her head,” said Lady Glencora. “Women have always pluck for anything. Wouldn’t you like to
see a live Kurd, Alice?”

“I don’t exactly know where they live,” said Alice.

“Nor I. I have not the remotest idea of the way to the Kurds. You see my joke, don’t you, though Plantagenet
doesn’t? But one knows that they are Eastern, and the East is such a grand idea!”

“I think we’ll content ourselves with Rome, or perhaps Naples, on this occasion,” said Mr Palliser.

The notion of Lady Glencora packing anything for herself was as good a joke as that other one of the Kurds and whey.
But she went flitting about from room to room, declaring that this thing must be taken, and that other, till the
market-basket would have become very large indeed. Alice was astonished at the extent of the preparations, and the sort
of equipage with which they were about to travel. Lady Glencora was taking her own carriage. “Not that I shall ever use
it,” she said to Alice, “but he insists upon it, to show that I am not supposed to be taken away in disgrace. He is so
good — isn’t he?”

“Very good,” said Alice. I know no one better.

“And so dull!” said Lady Glencora. “But I fancy that all husbands are dull from the nature of their position. If I
were a young woman’s husband, I shouldn’t know what to say to her that wasn’t dull.”

Two women and two men servants were to be taken. Alice had received permission to bring her own maid — “or a dozen,
if you want them,” Lady Glencora had said. “Mr Palliser in his present mood would think nothing too much to do for you.
If you were to ask him to go among the Kurds, he’d go at once — or on to Crim Tartary, if you made a point of it.” But
as both Lady Glencora’s servants spoke French, and as her own did not, Alice trusted herself in that respect to her
cousin. “You shall have one all to yourself,” said Lady Glencora. “I only take two for the same reason that I take the
carriage — just as you let a child go out in her best frock, for a treat, after you’ve scolded her.”

When Alice asked why it was supposed that Mr Palliser was so specially devoted to her, the thing was explained to
her. “You see, my dear, I have told him everything. I always do tell everything. Nobody can say I am not candid. He
knows about your not letting me come to your house in the old days. Oh, Alice! — you were wrong then; I shall always
say that. But it’s done and gone; and things that are done and gone shall be done and gone for me. And I told him all
that you said — about you know what. I have had nothing else to do but make confessions for the last ten days, and when
a woman once begins, the more she confesses the better. And I told him that you refused Jeffrey.”

“You didn’t?”

“I did indeed, and he likes you the better for that. I think he’d let Jeffrey marry you now if you both wished it —
and then, oh dear! — supposing that you had a son and that we adopted it?”

“Cora, if you go on in that way I will not remain with you.”

“But you must, my dear. You can’t escape now. At any rate, you can’t when we once get to Paris. Oh dear! you
shouldn’t grudge me my little naughtinesses. I have been so proper for the last ten days. Do you know I got into a way
of driving Dandy and Flirt at the rate of six miles an hour, till I’m sure the poor beasts thought they were always
going to a funeral. Poor Dandy and poor Flirt! I shan’t see them now for another year.”

On the following morning they breakfasted early, because Mr Palliser had got into an early habit. He had said that
early hours would be good for them. “But he never tells me why,” said Lady Glencora. “I think it is pleasant when
people are travelling,” said Alice. “It isn’t that,” her cousin answered; “but we are all to be such particularly good
children. It’s hardly fair, because he went to sleep last night after dinner while you and I kept ourselves awake: but
we needn’t do that another night, to be sure.” After breakfast they all three went to work to do nothing. It was
ludicrous and almost painful to see Mr Palliser wandering about and counting the boxes, as though he could do any good
by that. At this special crisis of his life he hated his papers and figures and statistics, and could not apply himself
to them. He, whose application had been so unremitting, could apply himself now to nothing. His world had been brought
to an abrupt end, and he was awkward at making a new beginning. I believe that they all three were reading novels
before one o’clock. Lady Glencora and Alice had determined that they would not leave the house throughout the day.
“Nothing has been said about it, but I regard it as part of the bond that I’m not to go out anywhere. Who knows but
what I might be found in Gloucester Square?” There was, however, no absolute necessity that Mr Palliser should remain
with them; and, at about three, he prepared himself for a solitary walk. He would not go down to the House. All
interest in the House was over with him for the present. He had the Speaker’s leave to absent himself for the season.
Nor would he call on any one. All his friends knew, or believed they knew, that he had left town. His death and burial
had been already chronicled, and were he now to reappear, he could reappear only as a ghost. He was being talked of as
the departed one — or rather, such talk on all sides had now come nearly to an end. The poor Duke of St Bungay still
thought of him with regret when more than ordinarily annoyed by some special grievance coming to him from Mr Finespun;
but even the Duke had become almost reconciled to the present order of things. Mr Palliser knew better than to disturb
all this by showing himself again in public; and prepared himself, therefore, to take another walk under the elms in
Kensington Gardens.

He had his hat on his head in the hall, and was in the act of putting on his gloves, when there came a knock at the
front door. The hall porter was there, a stout, plethoric personage, not given to many words, who was at this moment
standing with his master’s umbrella in his hand, looking as though he would fain be of some use to somebody, if any
such utility were compatible with the purposes of his existence. Now had come this knock at the door, while the
umbrella was still in his hand, and the nature of his visage changed, and it was easy to see that he was oppressed by
the temporary multiplicity of his duties. “Give me the umbrella, John,” said Mr Palliser. John gave up the umbrella,
and opening the door disclosed Burgo Fitzgerald standing upon the doorstep. “Is Lady Glencora at home?” asked Burgo,
before he had seen the husband. John turned a dismayed face upon his master, as though he knew that the comer ought not
to be making a morning call at that house — as no doubt he did know very well — and made no instant reply. “I am not
sure,” said Mr Palliser, making his way out as he had originally purposed. “The servant will find out for you.” Then he
went on his way across Park Lane and into the Park, never once turning back his face to see whether Burgo had effected
an entrance into the house. Nor did he return a minute earlier than he would otherwise have done. After all, there was
something chivalrous about the man.

“Yes; Lady Glencora was at home,” said the porter, not stirring to make any further inquiry. It was no business of
his if Mr Palliser chose to receive such a guest. He had not been desired to say that her ladyship was not at home.
Burgo was therefore admitted and shown direct up into the room in which Lady Glencora was sitting. As chance would have
it, she was alone. Alice had left her and was in her own chamber, and Lady Glencora was sitting at the window of the
small room upstairs that overlooked the Park. She was seated on a footstool with her face between her hands when Burgo
was admitted, thinking of him, and of what the world might have been to her had “they left her alone,” as she was in
the habit of saying to Alice and to herself.

She rose quickly, so that he saw her only as she was rising. “Ask Miss Vavasor to come to me,” she said, as the
servant left the room; and then she came forward to greet her lover.

“Cora,” he said, dashing at once into his subject — hopelessly, but still with a resolve to do as he had said that
he would do. “Cora, I have come to you, to ask you to go with me.”

“I will not go with you,” said she.

“Do not answer me in that way, without a moment’s thought. Everything is arranged — ”

“Yes, everything is arranged,” she said. “Mr Fitzgerald, let me ask you to leave me alone, and to behave to me with
generosity. Everything is arranged. You can see that my boxes are all prepared for going. Mr Palliser and I, and my
friend, are starting tomorrow. Wish me God-speed and go, and be generous.”

“And is this to be the end of everything?” He was standing close to her, but hitherto he had only touched her hand
at greeting her. “Give me your hand, Cora,” he said.

“No — I will never give you my hand again. You should be generous to me and go. This is to be the end of everything
— of everything that is common to you and to me. Go, when I ask you.”

“Cora; did you ever love me?”

“Yes; I did love you. But we were separated, and there was no room for love left between us.”

“You are as dear to me now — dearer than ever you were. Do not look at me like that. Did you not tell me when we
last parted that I might come to you again? Are we children, that others should come between us and separate us like
that?”

“Yes, Burgo; we are children. Here is my cousin coming. You must leave me now.” As she spoke the door was opened and
Alice entered the room. “Miss Vavasor, Mr Fitzgerald,” said Lady Glencora. “I have told him to go and leave me. Now
that you have come, Alice, he will perhaps obey me.”

Alice was dumbfounded, and knew not how to speak either to him or to her; but she stood with her eyes riveted on the
face of the man of whom she had heard so much. Yes; certainly he was very beautiful. She had never before seen man’s
beauty such as that. She found it quite impossible to speak a word to him then — at the spur of the moment, but she
acknowledged the introduction with a slight inclination of the head, and then stood silent, as though she were waiting
for him to go.

“Mr Fitzgerald, why do you not leave me and go?” said Lady Glencora.

Poor Burgo also found it difficult enough to speak. What could he say? His cause was one which certainly did not
admit of being pleaded in the presence of a strange lady; and he might have known from the moment in which he heard
Glencora’s request that a third person should be summoned to their meeting — and probably did know, that there was no
longer any hope for him. It was not on the cards that he should win. But there remained one thing that he must do. He
must get himself out of that room; and how was he to effect that?

“I had hoped,” said he, looking at Alice, though he addressed Lady Glencora — “I had hoped to be allowed to speak to
you alone for a few minutes.”

“No, Mr Fitzgerald; it cannot be so. Alice, do not go. I sent for my cousin when I saw you, because I did not choose
to be alone with you. I have asked you to go — ”

“You perhaps have not understood me?”

“I understand you well enough.”

“Then, Mr Fitzgerald,” said Alice, “why do you not do as Lady Glencora has asked you? You know — you must know, that
you ought not to be here.”

“I know nothing of the kind,” said he, still standing his ground.

“Alice,” said Lady Glencora, “we will leave Mr Fitzgerald here, since he drives us from the room.”

In such contests, a woman has ever the best of it at all points. The man plays with a button to his foil, while the
woman uses a weapon that can really wound. Burgo knew that he must go — felt that he must skulk away as best he might,
and perhaps hear a low titter of half-suppressed laughter as he went. Even that might be possible. “No, Lady Glencora,”
he said, “I will not drive you from the room. As one must be driven out, it shall be I. I own I did think that you
would at any rate have been — less hard to me.” He then turned to go, bowing again very slightly to Miss Vavasor.

He was on the threshold of the door before Glencora’s voice recalled him. “Oh my God!” she said, “I am hard — harder
than flint. I am cruel. Burgo!” And he was back with her in a moment, and had taken her by the hand.

“Glencora,” said Alice, “pray — pray let him go. Mr Fitzgerald, if you are a man, do not take advantage of her
folly.”

“I will speak to him,” said Lady Glencora. “I will speak to him, and then he shall leave me.” She was holding him by
the hand now and turning to him, away from Alice, who had taken her by the arm. “Burgo,” she said, repeating his name
twice again, with all the passion that she could throw into the word — “Burgo, no good can come of this. Now, you must
leave me. You must go. I shall stay with my husband as I am bound to do. Because I have wronged you, I will not wrong
him also. I loved you — you know I loved you.” She still held him by the hand, and was now gazing up into his face,
while the tears were streaming from her eyes.

“Sir,” said Alice, “you have heard from her all that you can care to hear. If you have any feeling of honour in you,
you will leave her.”

“I will never leave her, while she tells me that she loves me!”

“Yes, Burgo, you will — you must! I shall never tell you that again, never. Do as she bids you. Go, and leave us —
but I could not bear that you should tell me that I was hard.”

“You are hard — hard and cruel, as you said, yourself.”

“Am I? May God forgive you for saying that of me!”

“Then why do you send me away?”

“Because I am a man’s wife, and because I care for his honour, if not for my own. Alice, let us go.”

He still held her, but she would have been gone from him had he not stooped over her, and put his arm round her
waist. In doing this, I doubt whether he was quicker than she would have been had she chosen to resist him. As it was,
he pressed her to his bosom, and, stooping over her, kissed her lips. Then he left her, and making his way out of the
room, and down the stairs, got himself out into the street.

“Thank God, that he is gone!” said Alice.

“You may say so,” said Lady Glencora, “for you have lost nothing!”

“And you have gained everything!”

“Have I? I did not know that I had ever gained anything, as yet. The only human being to whom I have ever yet given
my whole heart — the only thing that I have ever really loved, has just gone from me for ever, and you bid me thank God
that I have lost him. There is no room for thankfulness in any of it; either in the love or in the loss. It is all
wretchedness from first to last!”

“At any rate, he understands now that you meant it when you told him to leave you.”

“Of course I meant it. I am beginning to know myself by degrees. As for running away with him, I have not the
courage to do it. I can think of it, scheme for it, wish for it — but as for doing it, that is beyond me. Mr Palliser
is quite safe. He need not try to coax me to remain.”

Alice knew that it was useless to argue with her, so she came and sat over her — for Lady Glencora had again placed
herself on the stool by the window — and tried to soothe her by smoothing her hair, and nursing her like a child.

“Of course I know that I ought to stay where I am,” she said, breaking out, almost with rage, and speaking with
quick, eager voice. “I am not such a fool as to mistake what I should be if I left my husband, and went to live with
that man as his mistress. You don’t suppose that I should think that sort of life very blessed. But why have I been
brought to such a pass as this? And as for female purity! Ah! What was their idea of purity when they forced me, like
ogres, to marry a man for whom they knew I never cared? Had I gone with him — had I now eloped with that man who ought
to have been my husband — whom would a just God have punished worst — me, or those two old women and my uncle, who
tortured me into this marriage?”

“Come, Cora — be silent.”

“I won’t be silent! You have had the making of your own lot. You have done what you liked, and no one has interfered
with you. You have suffered, too; but you, at any rate, can respect yourself.”

“And so can you, Cora — thoroughly, now.”

“How — when he kissed me, and I could hardly restrain myself from giving him back his kiss tenfold, could I respect
myself? But it is all sin. I sin towards my husband, feigning that I love him; and I sin in loving that other man, who
should have been my husband. There — I hear Mr Palliser at the door. Come away with me; or rather, stay, for he will
come up here, and you can keep him in talk while I try to recover myself.”

Mr Palliser did at once as his wife had said, and came upstairs to the little front room, as soon as he had
deposited his hat in the hall. Alice was, in fact, in doubt what she should do as to mentioning, or omitting to
mention, Mr Fitzgerald’s name. In an ordinary way, it would be natural that she should name any visitor who had called,
and she specially disliked the idea of remaining silent because that visitor had come as the lover of her host’s wife.
But, on the other hand, she owed much to Lady Glencora; and there was no imperative reason, as things had gone, why she
should make mischief. There was no further danger to be apprehended. But Mr Palliser at once put an end to her doubts.
“You have had a visitor here?” said he.

“Yes,” said Alice.

“I saw him as I went out,” said Mr Palliser. “Indeed, I met him at the hall door. He, of course, was wrong to come
here — so wrong, that he deserves punishment, if there were any punishment for such offences.”

“He has been punished, I think,” said Alice.

“But as for Glencora,” continued Mr Palliser, without any apparent notice of what Alice had said, “I thought it
better that she should see him or not, as she should herself decide.”

“She had no choice in the matter. As it turned out, he was shown up here at once. She sent for me, and I think she
was right to do that.”

“Glencora was alone when he came in?”

“For a minute or two — till I could get to her.”

“I have no questions to ask about it,” said Mr Palliser, after waiting for a few moments. He had probably thought
that Alice would say something further. “I am very glad that you were within reach of her, as otherwise her position
might have been painful. For her, and for me perhaps, it may be as well that he has been here. As for him, I can only
say, that I am forced to suppose him to be a villain. What a man does when driven by passion, I can forgive; but that
he should deliberately plan schemes to ruin both her and me, is what I can hardly understand.” As he made this little
speech I wonder whether his conscience said anything to him about Lady Dumbello, and a certain evening in his own life,
on which he had ventured to call that lady Griselda.

The little party of three dined together very quietly, and after dinner they all went to work with their novels.
Before long Alice saw that Mr Palliser was yawning, and she began to understand how much he had given up in order that
his wife might be secure. It was then, when he had left the room for a few minutes, in order that he might wake himself
by walking about the house, that Glencora told Alice of his yawning down at Matching. “I used to think that he would
fall in pieces. What are we to do about it?”

“Don’t seem to notice it,” said Alice.

“That’s all very well,” said the other; “but he’ll set us off yawning as bad as himself, and then he’ll notice it.
He has given himself up to politics, till nothing else has any salt in it left for him. I cannot think why such a man
as that wanted a wife at all?”

“You are very hard upon him, Cora.”

“I wish you were his wife, with all my heart. But, of course, I know why he got married. And I ought to feel for him
as he has been so grievously disappointed.” Then Mr Palliser having walked off his sleep, returned to the room, and the
remainder of the evening was passed in absolute tranquillity.

Burgo Fitzgerald, when he left the house, turned back into Grosvenor Square, not knowing, at first, whither he was
going. He took himself as far as his uncle’s door, and then, having paused there for a moment, hurried on. For half an
hour, or thereabouts, something like true feeling was at work within his heart. He had once more pressed to his bosom
the woman he had, at any rate, thought that he had loved. He had had his arm round her, and had kissed her, and the
tone with which she had called him by his name was still ringing in his ears. “Burgo!” He repeated his own name audibly
to himself, as though in this way he could recall her voice. He comforted himself for a minute with the conviction that
she loved him. He felt — for a moment — that he could live on such consolation as that! But among mortals there could,
in truth, hardly be one with whom such consolation would go a shorter way. He was a man who required to have such
comfort backed by patés and curaçoa to a very large extent, and now it might be doubted whether the amount of patés and
curaçoa at his command would last him much longer.

He would not go in and tell his aunt at once of his failure, as he could gain nothing by doing so. Indeed, he
thought that he would not tell his aunt at all. So he turned back from Grosvenor Square, and went down to his club in
St James’s Street, feeling that billiards and brandy and water might, for the present, be the best restorative. But, as
he went back, he blamed himself very greatly in the matter of those bank-notes which he had allowed Lady Monk to take
from him. How had it come to pass that he had been such a dupe in her hands? When he entered his club in St James’s
Street his mind had left Lady Glencora, and was hard at work considering how he might best contrive to get that spoil
out of his aunt’s possession.